Tarakata, Tarakaṭa: 3 definitions
Introduction:
Tarakata means something in Marathi. If you want to know the exact meaning, history, etymology or English translation of this term then check out the descriptions on this page. Add your comment or reference to a book if you want to contribute to this summary article.
Languages of India and abroad
Marathi-English dictionary
Source: DDSA: The Molesworth Marathi and English Dictionarytarakaṭa (तरकट).—n A fabrication; an invented story to deceive, defraud, frighten; a wicked machination or plot. v ghē, sāṅga.
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tarakaṭa (तरकट) [or तरकटी, tarakaṭī].—or ṭyā a tarakaṭabāja c (tarakaṭa) A fabricator of stories; an impostor, a slanderer, an ill-scheming, mischief-devising fellow.
Source: DDSA: The Aryabhusan school dictionary, Marathi-Englishtarakaṭa (तरकट).—n A fabrication; a wicked machi- nation. A bad, or absurd, reasoning, A guess wide of the mark.
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tarakaṭa (तरकट) [-ṭī-ṭyā, -टी-ट्या].—a tarakaṭabāja c A fabricator of stories; an ill-scheming, mischief- devising fellow. Excitable, iracible.
Marathi is an Indo-European language having over 70 million native speakers people in (predominantly) Maharashtra India. Marathi, like many other Indo-Aryan languages, evolved from early forms of Prakrit, which itself is a subset of Sanskrit, one of the most ancient languages of the world.
Kannada-English dictionary
Source: Alar: Kannada-English corpusTarakaṭa (ತರಕಟ):—
1) [noun] great suffering, acute distress; agony.
2) [noun] the quality of being hard, callous, merciless; callousness; hardness.
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Taṟakaṭa (ತಱಕಟ):—
1) [noun] great suffering, acute distress; agony.
2) [noun] the quality of being hard, callous, merciless; callousness; hardness.
Kannada is a Dravidian language (as opposed to the Indo-European language family) mainly spoken in the southwestern region of India.
See also (Relevant definitions)
Starts with: Tarakatagadu, Tarakatakadu, Tarakatalu, Tarakatam, Tarakatampam, Tarakatanem.
Relevant text
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